All Tech Considered

Parent Over Shoulder: Apps Help Mom Snoop Online, But Should She?

As more teens get mobile devices, parents are using apps to track their every tweet and post.

iStockphoto.com

When his teenage son ventured into social media, Virginia father Mike Robinson wanted to make sure he could keep tabs on him. Robinson works in IT, so he rigged a surveillance system that works no matter what kind of device either of them is on.

"It's sort of like a version of remote desktop that enables you to run the program kind of silently in the background," Robinson says.

One day, checking in from his iPhone, Robinson discovered that his son had come across an adult meet-up site on Facebook.

"It wasn't that he was ... trying to find people," he says. "He was just trying to look at the pictures that were on those sites, which were pretty explicit."

That prompted a father-son chat about values and relationships.

"From a parental perspective," Robinson says, "I don't think I'd be doing my job unless I was trying to keep track of this type of activity."

Not Like Reading A Diary

"I think it's one more tool that we can use as parents to ensure our children's safety," says Betsy Landers, president of the National PTA.

She says parents are feeling their way, trying to bring up kids responsibly in a digital landscape they didn't grow up in themselves. The old advice — put the computer in a common room and block certain sites — no longer works now that the digital world has gone mobile. And Landers says keeping tabs on what a child does online is not at all like reading a diary.

"It's open to so much exposure," she says. "Predators now can prey on our kids online when they are totally unaware that they're dealing with an adult."

Of course, not everyone's adept enough to set up his own monitoring system like Robinson did. But parents' fears have prompted a booming new market in apps designed to help Mom and Dad stay one step ahead of their child.

Popular software includes apps like uKnowKids, MinorMonitor and Norton Online Family, which can comb through every Facebook post, text, instant message or Google search on a child's device and alert parents to keywords of their choosing. Another app, MamaBear, also promises to notify parents of signs of bullying or inappropriate language and can even alert them if the car their child is in is speeding.

One tech blogger castigated MamaBear as "intrusive," "controlling" and "down right disrespectful" to children. She's not the only one with concerns.

Undermining Trust?

"When parents are engaged in these kind of monitoring activities, they end up being interpreted by their young people as spying," says Lynn Schofield Clark, who has a new book called The Parent App about families in the digital age.

Clark worries that too much monitoring undermines trust between parents and children. And, she says, it can backfire. She found plenty of teens with two Facebook accounts, only one of which Mom or Dad knew about.

"Teenagers are always about trying to create some kind of a space for themselves, where they can interact with their peers apart from supervision," Clark says. "And so they're gonna find ways to do that."

Dave Otto, father of three daughters in Northern Virginia, says he doesn't want his children "feeling like it's normal that I know every word or every thought." But Otto is an information security specialist with the federal government, and he knows all too well about the risks online. He uses a program called Web Watcher, which logs every email, instant message and keystroke. But Otto mainly keeps quiet about what he finds.

"There are things I've seen, where, I kind of slap my head and think, 'Ack!' " he says. "But it was just kids being kids. I can't police that. I don't want to police that."

Mostly, Otto says, the monitoring prompts discussions about the amount of time his kids spend online when they're supposed to be doing homework.

While some worry about intruding on teens' private lives, Kim Kelso of Tampa, Fla., says a monitoring app has meant newfound freedom for her 16-year-old son.

"I just got an alert that my son just arrived home," she told me as we spoke one afternoon on a school day. The MamaBear app had just sent her an automatic message once her son walked in the door at home.

Her son has mild autism, and Kelso says he's prone to getting lost and doesn't always make good decisions. But with her new monitoring ability, she's allowed him to not only get a phone but also join Facebook.

"I get notifications if he's got a new friend request," she says. "I can go onto his Facebook account and I can see if they're texting or typing in bad words, and I can actually block those words from being able to be used."

Kelso says her son is thrilled with the phone and has no objections to the monitoring. Others, though, can find it frustrating. In Virginia, Robinson says at times his son has been driven to an unlikely extreme. To speak freely and unchecked with his friends, he's actually resorted to that old-fashioned mode of communication — the telephone.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Audie Cornish.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

And I'm Robert Siegel. As more children get their own smartphones, iPods and tablets, surveys show most parents are fretting about the dangers that lurk on the Web. Well, here's the good news. There's an app for that. NPR's Jennifer Ludden reports on the growing industry to help parents stay one step ahead of their kids.

JENNIFER LUDDEN, BYLINE: The advice used to be: Put the computer in a common room, and block kids from certain sites. But that doesn't work in a world of tweets, posts and Instagram. So in Virginia, Mike Robinson, who works in IT, has rigged a way to keep tabs on his teenage son, no matter what device either of them is on.

MIKE ROBINSON: It's sort of like a version of remote desktop, that enables you to run the program kind of silently in the background.

LUDDEN: This let Robinson see that one day on Facebook, his son came across an adult meet-up site.

ROBINSON: It wasn't that he was going after - trying to find people. He was just trying to look at the pictures that were on those sites - which were pretty explicit.

BETSY LANDERS: I think it's one more tool that we can use, as parents, to ensure our children's safety.

LUDDEN: Betsy Landers heads the National Parent Teacher Association. She says keeping tabs on what a child does online, is not like reading their diary.

LANDERS: It's open to so much exposure. Predators now can prey on our kids online - when they are totally unaware that they're dealing with an adult.

LUDDEN: Of course, not everyone's adept enough to set up their own monitoring system. So software developers have responded to parents' fears with a booming market in easy-to-use apps.

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #3: You can even be notified of signs of bullying, or inappropriate language.

LUDDEN: Those are ads for uKnowKids, Norton Online Family and MamaBear - a recent app which, among many other things, can also alert you if the car your child is in, is speeding. One tech reviewer castigated MamaBear as intrusive, controlling, and downright disrespectful to children. She's not the only one with concerns.

LYNN SCHOFIELD CLARK: When parents are engaged in these kind of monitoring activities, they end up being interpreted by their young people, as spying.

LUDDEN: Lynn Schofield Clark has a new book, called "The Parent App," on families in the digital age. She worries that too much monitoring undermines trust between parents and children. And, she says, it can backfire. She found plenty of teens with two Facebook accounts, only one of which mom or dad knew about.

CLARK: Teenagers are always about trying to create some kind of a space for themselves, where they can interact with their peers apart from supervision. And so they're gonna find ways to do that.

DAVE OTTO: I don't want my children feeling like it's normal that I know every word or every thought.

LUDDEN: But Dave Otto is an information security specialist with the federal government and knows all too well about the risks online. He uses a program called Web Watcher, which logs every email, instant message and keystroke his three daughters type or read, though Otto mainly keeps quiet about what he finds.

OTTO: There are things I've seen, where I kind of slap my head and think, oh, you know, I wish they weren't - but it was just kids being kids. I can't police that. I don't want to police that.

LUDDEN: Mostly, Otto says, he'll chide his kids for goofing around online when they were supposed to be doing homework. While some worry about intruding on teens' private lives, Kim Kelso in Tampa, says a monitoring app means newfound freedom for her 16-year-old son. We spoke at 5:00 on a school day.

KIM KELSO: I just got an alert that my son just arrived home.

LUDDEN: Her son has mild autism. Kelso says he's prone to getting lost and doesn't always make good decisions. But with the MamaBear app, she allowed him to not only get a phone, but also join Facebook.

KELSO: I get notifications if he's got a new friend request. I can go on his Facebook account and I can see if they're texting or typing in bad words, and I can actually block those words from being able to be used.

LUDDEN: Kelso says her son is thrilled with the phone and has no objections to the monitoring. Others, though, can find it frustrating. In Virginia, Mike Robinson says at times his son has been driven to an unlikely extreme. To speak freely and unchecked with his friends, he's actually resorted to that old-fashioned mode of communication, the telephone. Jennifer Ludden, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.